Filadephia experiment U.S. Navy travels on time, understanding shocks (Photo)

Filadephia experiment U.S. Navy travels on time, understanding shocks (Photo)

Philadelphia's experiment is something that most people have heard, but very few know about the details that characterize this project. A certain theory is embedded in popular culture, making it a truly strange story. On August 12, 1943, October 28, 1943, according to some accounts, the destroyer “U n SS Eldridge” [...]

On August 12, 1943, October 28, 1943, according to some accounts, the destroyer “U n The SS Eldridge” was set for a special test conducted by the American Navy.

Accurate details are unknown, but some have speculated that they included experiments with magnetic, optical, and radar incapable. Other speculations claim that the navy had attempted to make the immune ship to magnetic fields by a process called branching (is the process of reducing or eliminating a magnetic field).

The experiment included creating an electromagnetic shield around “Eldridge” by activating two (four according to some accounts) massive Tesla wrap, reports “Locking”, Transmission Periscope. They would act as electromagnetic generators where the created field would wrap the ship, making it invisible to radar. Others say magnetic generators called branchers have been used instead of Tesla's wrappings.

 

The results far exceeded Navy expectations. The moment the experiment began, a series of strange and inexplicable effects developed. The electromagnetic field had lasted further than expected, about a hundred meters in all directions, forming a bubble around the ship.

Within this bubble, the details of the ship became unclear, some say there was mist, and a green mist darkened the ship's view. Moments later, the ship disappeared completely on a blue flash.

“U n The SS Eldridge” not only disappeared from the eye but disappeared from the physical plane. He appeared several hundred miles away in Norfolk, Virginia.

Reports of the ship stated that it was seen on the open sea for a few minutes, after which it disappeared. She resurfaced in Philadelphia and seemed to have just discovered the accidental teleportation.

Conspiracy Theorists say the navy had based this experiment on Nikola Tesla's research letters captured by the FBI after his death. According to Tesla, he had just completed a theory of an Unified Fushe that underlined the links between gravity and electromagnetism. So the navy was able to distort space-time using powerful electromagnets.

As the experiment successfully moved the ship into the surrounding universe, this rift had serious consequences on crew members.

The remaining crew was so shocked by what many of them lost control of reality, and the navy decided to cancel the operation. /Periscopi/

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